Australia beat India by 48 runs in first Test thriller

December 13, 2014

Australia beatAdelaide, Dec 13: Spinner Nathan Lyon took seven second-innings wickets and 12 for the match as Australia pulled off a stunning 48-run win over India on Saturday in the first test at the Adelaide Oval.

India looked set to achieve a record run chase after stand-in captain Virat Kohli (141) and opener Murali Vijay (99) led India through a second session without loss.

But Australia took eight wickets in the final session, the match ended by Lyon on a stumping for the final wicket, prompting emotional celebrations by an Australia team playing its first match since the death of teammate Phillip Hughes two weeks ago in a domestic match.

Australia captain Michael Clarke suffered yet another hamstring injury and is doubtful for the second test beginning Wednesday in Brisbane.

Scoreboard

Australia (first Innings): 517/7 declared

India (first Innings): 444 all out

Australia (second Innings):

Chris Rogers c R Sharma b K Sharma 21

David Warner b K Sharma 102

Shane Watson b Mohammed Shami 33

Michael Clarke c Saha b Aaron 7

Steven Smith batting 52

Mitchell Marsh c Vijay b RG Sharma 40

Brad Haddin batting 14

Extras (b 1, lb 6, w 5, nb 9) 21

Total (for five wickets in 69 overs; dec) 290

Fall of wickets: 1—38 (Rogers, 12.1 overs), 2—140 (Watson, 38.5), 3—168 (Clarke, 45.6), 4—213 (Warner, 59.1), 5—266 (Marsh, 64.4)

Bowling:

Mohammed Shami 11—2—42—1

Ishant Sharma 14—3—41—0

Karn Sharma 16—2—95—2

Murali Vijay 6—0—27—0

Varun Aaron 10—0—43—1

Rohit Sharma 12—2—35—1

India (second innings):

Shikhar Dhawan c Haddin b Johnson 9

Murali Vijay batting 85

Cheteshwar Pujara c Haddin b Lyon 21

Virat Kohli c Marsh b Lyon 141

Ajinkya Rahane c Rogers b Lyon 0

Rohit Sharma c Warner b Lyon 6

Wriddhiman Saha b Lyon 13

Karn Sharma not out 4

Mohammed Shami c Johnson b Harris 5

Varun Aaron lbw b Johnson 1

Ishant Sharma st Haddin b Lyon 1

Extras (b 5, lb 8, w 2) 15

Total (all out in 87.1 overs) 315

Fall of wickets: 1—16 (Dhawan, 4.1), 2—57 (Pujara, 19.2), 3—242 (Vijay, 69.1), 4—242 (Rahane, 69.6), 5—277 (RG Sharma, 77.4), 6—299 (Saha, 79.6), 7—304 (Kohli, 81.4), 8—309 (Mohammed Shami, 84.2), 9—314 (Aaron, 86.1), 10—315 (I Sharma, 87.1)

Bowling:

Mitchell Johnson 16—2—45—2

Ryan Harris 19—6—49—1

Nathan Lyon 34.1—5—152—7

Peter Siddle 9—3—21—0

Shane Watson 2—0—6—0

Steven Smith 3—0—18—0

Mitchell Marsh 4—1—11—0

Match Details:

Umpires: Marais Erasmus (South Africa) and Ian Gould (England)

Test debut: Karn Sharma (India)

TV umpire: Mick Martell

Match referee: Jeff Crowe (New Zealand)

Reserve umpire: Geoff Joshua

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Agencies
June 23,2020

Islamabad, Jun 23: Seven more Pakistan cricketers, including Muhammad Hafeez and Wahab Riaz, selected for the tour of England have tested positive for COVID-19, taking the total to 10, the PCB revealed on Tuesday.

The seven who tested positive on Tuesday are Kashif Bhatti, Muhammad Hasnain, Fakhar Zaman, Muhammad Rizwan, Imran Khan, Hafeez and Riaz. Shadab Khan, Haider Ali and Haris Rauf had returned positive tests on Monday.

“It is not a great situation to be in and what it shows is these are 10 fit and young athletes...if it can happen to players it can happen to anyone,” Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) CEO, Wasim Khan told a media conference.

He said a support staff member, masseur Malang Ali, had also tested positive for COVID-19.

Khan said that the players and officials would now assemble in Lahore and another round of tests would be carried out on June 25 and a revised squad would be announced the next day.

The squad has to leave on June 28 for the series scheduled to be held next month, he said.

“It is a matter of concern but we shouldn’t panic at this time as we have time on our hands,” Khan said.

He said the players and officials would be retested on reaching England.

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News Network
March 23,2020

Colombo, Mar 23: Sri Lankan batting great Kumar Sangakkara has said he is currently in self-quarantine, following his government's guidelines for those recently returning from Europe, which has now become the epicentre of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The authorities are concerned over people returning from the most-affected COVID-19 countries in Europe not registering with the police and practising isolation.

"I have no symptoms or anything like that, but I'm following government guidelines," Sangakkara told News First.

"I arrived from London over a week ago and the first thing was there was a news bulletin saying that anyone who had travelled from within March 1 to 15 should register themselves with the police and undergo self-quarantine. I registered myself with the police."

The former captain said this even as the government confirmed there have been at least three cases of recent returnees attempting to hide the novel coronavirus symptoms from authorities.

Both Sangakkara and his former teammate Mahela Jayawardene have been active on social media, urging Sri Lankans to avoid panic and to exercise proper social distancing, as the country went into curfew on Friday evening.

Sri Lanka has so far reported more than 80 active COVID-19 positive cases in the country.

Across the world, the number of infected has crossed three lakh besides a death toll of more than 14,000 people.

Meanwhile, former Australia pacer Jason Gillespie has also gone into a two-week isolation after returning from the United Kingdom.

Gillespie, who is the head coach at Sussex, had been in Cape Town with the team for a pre-season tour, which was cut short as a result of the coronavirus outbreak.

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News Network
May 11,2020

Mumbai, May 11: The French Open, which was postponed to September from May due to the novel coronavirus outbreak, could be held without fans, the organisers of the claycourt Grand Slam have said.

Roland Garros had been scheduled for May 24 to June 7 before the French tennis federation (FFT) pushed it back to Sept. 20-Oct 4 in a bid to save the tournament from falling victim to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Last week the FFT said all tickets purchased for this year's French Open would be cancelled and reimbursed instead of being transferred.

"Organising it without fans would allow a part of the economy to keep turning, (like) television rights and partnerships. It's not to be overlooked," FFT President Bernard Giudicelli told French newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche.

"We're not ruling any option out."

The tennis season was suspended in early March due to the pandemic and the hiatus will continue at least until mid-July with many countries in lockdown.

Wimbledon has been cancelled while the status of the U.S. Open, scheduled to take place in late August, is still unclear.

COVID-19 Pandemic Tracker: 15 countries with the highest number of coronavirus cases, deaths

The FFT was widely criticised when they announced in mid-March that the French Open would be switched, with players bemoaning a lack of communication as the new dates clashed with the hardcourt season.

Organisers said last week they had been in talks with the sport's governing bodies to fine tune the calendar amid media reports that the Grand Slam tournament would be delayed further by a week and start on Sept. 27.

The delayed start would give players a two-week window between the end of the U.S. Open, played on the hardcourts of New York, and the Paris tournament.

"The 20th or the 27th, that does not change much," Giudicelli said.

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